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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, May 2, 2018
The 7 most intriguing questions Robert Mueller wants to ask Trump
With questions circling about President Trump giving an interview in one of his legal cases, his manner in past depositions hints at how he may behave. (Jenny Starrs/The Washington Post)
By Aaron Blake May 1 at 8:00 AM
Now we know what special counsel Robert S. Mueller III wants to ask President Trump (at least in part).
Now we know what special counsel Robert S. Mueller III wants to ask President Trump (at least in part).
The New York Times reported Monday
evening questions the special counsel's team has previewed with Trump's
lawyers as they negotiate whether the president will sit for an
interview. And although many of them are unsurprising — going over key
events in the investigations of obstruction and Russian collusion in the
2016 campaign and what Trump knew about them — some hint at points of
emphasis, previously unknown angles and mysterious subplots.
Below are seven questions that caught my eye.
1. “What knowledge did you have of any outreach by your
campaign, including by Paul Manafort, to Russia about potential
assistance to the campaign?”
That middle phrase is the one that sticks out: “including by Paul Manafort.” Why specify him and only him?
Until a few weeks ago, Manafort wasn't widely considered a key figure in the collusion investigation.
He was mostly seen as someone who might flip on Trump because of the
dozens of criminal charges he faces. But a court filing last month
revealed that Mueller had sought authorization to expand his inquiry
into allegations that Manafort “committed a crime or crimes by colluding with Russian government officials.” And another filing shortly before that described a Manafort business associate, Konstantin Kilimnik, as having ongoing ties to Russian intelligence during the 2016 campaign. (It has previously been asserted that Kilimnik had ties to Russian intelligence, but not necessarily during the campaign.)
Manafort is hardly the only person linked to possible collusion. Others
include Donald Trump Jr., longtime informal adviser Roger Stone and
Jared Kushner, the president's son-in-law and senior aide. The fact that
Manafort is explicitly mentioned, when combined with these two recent
filings, can't help but raise eyebrows.
2. “How was the decision made to fire Mr. Flynn on Feb. 13, 2017?”
This sounds routine, but it could mean that Mueller is interested in a
tweet sent from Trump's account in December that said Trump fired former
national security adviser Michael Flynn “because he lied to the Vice President and the FBI.”
I had to fire General Flynn because he lied to the Vice President and the FBI. He has pled guilty to those lies. It is a shame because his actions during the transition were lawful. There was nothing to hide!
That was important because shortly after firing Flynn, Trump approached
then-FBI Director James B. Comey about seeking leniency for Flynn,
according to Comey. That plea would be more problematic from an
obstruction of justice standpoint if Trump knew Flynn had lied to the
FBI and was in legal jeopardy because of it. It would suggest Trump
wanted to help Flynn to protect himself.
Trump's legal team quickly went into cleanup mode. Then-attorney John Dowd said that he was responsible for the sloppily worded tweet and
that Trump was only generally aware of Flynn's conversations with the
FBI. Mueller wants to know Trump's version of how that went down.
3. “What did you think and do in reaction to the news that the
special counsel was speaking to Mr. Rogers, Mr. Pompeo and Mr. Coats?”
This is a real mystery. The Washington Post reported last year that
Trump asked Director of National Intelligence Daniel Coats if he could
intervene to get Comey to back off Flynn, with then-CIA Director Mike
Pompeo present at the meeting. (The other official mentioned here is
National Security Agency Director Michael Rogers.) But this isn't that.
Lots of questions on the Times's list are very general and clearly refer
to things that have been reported publicly, but this seems to refer to a
specific episode about which we don't really know anything. Exactly
what it is is anybody's guess.
4. “Did you discuss whether Mr. Sessions would protect you, and reference past attorneys general?”
Trump is big on loyalty, he has expressed frustration with Attorney
General Jeff Sessions, and he has spoken glowingly how Barack Obama's
attorney general, Eric H. Holder Jr., “totally protected” Obama. But whether he has tied all those things together is another thing.
This suggests that Mueller wants to know whether Trump has directly
asked Sessions for protection. We don't know, of course, whether that's
because someone told Mueller that Trump did, or just because Mueller
thinks it's logical that he may have.
5. “What did you think and what did you do in reaction to the news of the appointment of the special counsel?”
Another mystery is why Mueller's own appointment is in the questions he
wants to ask Trump. You'd expect Mueller to be interested in Trump's
efforts to fire him — and other questions deal with that — but this one is a head-scratcher.
Again, is there a specific event Mueller is aware of that he wants to ask Trump about? Or is this just a general inquiry?
6. “What discussions did you have regarding terminating the
special counsel, and what did you do when that consideration was
reported in January 2018?”
The second part is the key. Trump seemed to publicly deny that he tried to fire Mueller, calling it “fake news.” This
may suggest that Mueller is interested in whether Trump misled the
American public about his own actions, or could allude to something else
Trump did that we, again, don't yet know about.
As I wrote at the time,
misleading public denials were cited in special counsel Kenneth Starr's
report on President Bill Clinton, even as the president wasn't under
oath.
7. “During a 2013 trip to Russia, what communication and
relationships did you have with the Agalarovs and Russian government
officials?”
Trump boasted in 2015 that
he met with high-level Russian business executives, including Aras
Agalarov, and government officials during his 2013 trip to Moscow for
the Miss Universe pageant. “I was with the top-level people, both
oligarchs and generals and top-of-the-government people,” he told radio
host Hugh Hewitt. “I can't go further than that, but I will tell you I
met the top people.”
It seems Mueller wants him to go further than that.